Popes and Jews, 1095-1291

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The Impact of the Crusades 129


France which still resisted his rule; he even invaded the county of toulouse in


1211, attempting unsuccessfully to take toulouse itself.144


In the summer of 1213, peter II of Aragon (1196–1213), believing that his


interests in the region were threatened by Simon, intervened on the side of the


southern French. Simon and his crusaders met the combined force of Aragon and


toulouse at Muret, defeated them, and killed peter himself. raymond vI of toulouse


was forced to flee and in 1215 at the Fourth Lateran Council Simon de Montfort


was formally invested by Innocent III with the County of toulouse and lands


adjacent which had been overrun by crusaders.145 raymond and his son—the


future raymond vII of toulouse—returned from exile in 1216, and although


Simon tried to take toulouse from them he was himself killed in 1218.146 despite


an expedition in 1219 by prince Louis, heir to the throne of France, raymond


vII began to recover his ancestral territories and only in 1226 did Louis, now


king of France, gain control of the region and—by 1229—force raymond to sue


for peace.147


Innocent III’s view that Jews as well as heretics posed a potential threat to


Christian society was particularly clear in letters concerned with the Albigensian


Crusade, and it is striking that heretics and Jews might both be viewed as an


‘internal’ threat in his correspondence to France. Indeed it is possible that Innocent’s


drive to eliminate heretics heightened his sensitivity to Jews. Hence in a letter ‘Etsi


non displiceat’ of 1205 he both complained to philip Augustus about what he saw


as pernicious Jewish activities in France and urged him to bestir himself to remove


heretics from his kingdom.148 He ordered philip Augustus to take steps to remove


heretics as part of his attempt to eliminate heresy in Languedoc which would


culminate in his call for the Albigensian Crusade.149 Later, writing in 1207 to


raymond vI of toulouse on the eve of the launch of the crusade which was to be


sent against him, Innocent blamed the count for entrusting Jews with public


office.150 In 1208 he declared that he had called on Christian soldiers to exter-


minate the followers of wicked heresy and he urged the king of France to induce


Jews to remit all usury owed by crusaders.151


Such correspondence reflected an increasing number of anti-Jewish allegations—


to be explained at least in part by the huge interest which Jews were charging


144 peter of les vaux-de-Cernay, The History of the Albigensian Crusade, ed. Sibly and Sibly,
pp.123–5.
145 peter of les vaux-de-Cernay, The History of the Albigensian Crusade, ed. Sibly and Sibly,
pp.253–5.
146 peter of les vaux-de-Cernay, The History of the Albigensian Crusade, ed. Sibly and Sibly, p.277.
147 Laurence Marvin, The Occitan War. A Military and Political History of the Albigensian Crusade,
1209–1218 (Cambridge, 2008), pp.301–2.
148 Innocent III, ‘Etsi non displiceat’ (16 January 1205), Grayzel, Vol. 1, pp.104–8; Simonsohn,
pp.82–4.
149 Innocent III, ‘Etsi non displiceat’, Grayzel, Vol. 1, pp.104–8; Simonsohn, pp.82–4.
150 Innocent III, ‘Si parietem cordis’ (29 May 1207), Grayzel, Vol. 1, p.124; Simonsohn, p.92.
151 Innocent III, ‘Ut contra crudelissimos’, Grayzel, Vol. 1 (9 October 1208), p.132; Simonsohn,
pp.94–5. He also repeated this call in his general crusading letter ‘Quia maior’ calling for the Fifth
Crusade to the Near East. See Innocent III, ‘Quia maior nunc’ (22 April 1213), Grayzel, Vol. 1, p.136;
Simonsohn, p.97.

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